Command and Control (74 page)

Read Command and Control Online

Authors: Eric Schlosser

“precision” tactical bombing
:
See John G. Norris, “Radford Statement Sparks Move for Curb Over Money Powers of Johnson,”
Washington Post,
October 8, 1949.

“I don't believe in mass killings of noncombatants”
:
Quoted in Ibid.

“random mass slaughter”
:
See “Text of Admiral Ofstie's Statement Assailing Strategic Bombing,”
New York Times,
October 12, 1949.

“ruthless and barbaric”
:
Ibid.

“We must insure that our military techniques”
:
Ibid.

“open rebellion”
:
Quoted in William S. White, “Bradley Accuses Admirals of ‘Open Rebellion' on Unity; Asks ‘All-American Team,'”
New York Times
, October 20, 1949.

“Fancy Dans”
:
Quoted in ibid.

“aspiring martyrs”
:
Quoted in Hanson W. Baldwin, “Bradley Bombs Navy,”
New York Times
, October 20, 1949.

“As far as I am concerned”
:
Quoted in
New York Times
, “Bradley Accuses Admirals.”

“The idea of turning over custody”
:
Quoted in David E. Lilienthal,
The Journals of David E. Lilienthal, Volume 2, The Atomic Energy Years, 1945–1950,
(New York: Harper & Row, 1964), p. 351.

“to have some dashing lieutenant colonel decide”
:
Quoted in Millis and Duffield,
Forrestal Diaries
, p. 458
.

“Destruction is just around the corner”
:
Quoted in Futrell,
Ideas, Volume 1,
p. 216.

Demobilization had left SAC a hollow force
:
For a book that makes that point convincingly, see Harry R. Borowski,
A Hollow Threat: Strategic Air Power and Containment Before Korea
(Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982).

almost half of SAC's B-29s failed to get off the ground
:
See Thomas M. Coffey,
Iron Eagle: The Turbulent Life of General Curtis LeMay
(New York: Crown, 1986), p. 271.

SAC had just twenty-six flight crews
:
Cited in “The View from Above: High-Level Decisions and the Soviet-American Strategic Arms Competition, 1945–1950,” Samuel R. Williamson, Jr., with the collaboration of Steven L. Reardon, Office of the Secretary of Defense, October 1975 (
TOP SECRET
/declassified),
p. 118.

Perhaps half of these crews would be shot down
:
Cited in Wainstein et al., “Evolution of U.S. Command and Control,” p. 14.

An estimated thirty-five to forty-five days of preparation
:
See ibid., p. 18.

Lindbergh found that morale was low
:
See Moody,
Building a Strategic Air Force
, pp. 226–27.

“cut off from normal life”
:
The quote comes from LeMay's memoir. Curtis E. LeMay with MacKinlay Kantor,
Mission with LeMay: My Story
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1965), p. 32.

a particular form of courage
:
American bomber crews had one of the most stressful and dangerous assignments of the Second World War. Remaining in formation meant flying directly through antiaircraft fire; breaking formation was grounds for court-martial. For the pressures of the job and the need for teamwork, see Mike Worden,
Rise of the Fighter Generals: The Problem of Air Force Leadership, 1945–1982
(Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press, 1998), pp. 8–11.

more than half would be killed in action
:
The typical tour of duty for an American bomber crew was twenty-five missions. A study of 2,051 crew members who flew bombing missions over Europe found that 1,295 were killed or declared missing in action. The study is cited in Bernard C. Nalty, John F. Shiner, and George M. Watson,
With Courage: The U.S. Army Air Forces in World War II
(Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, 1994), p. 179.

“Japan would burn if we could get fire on it”
:
The prediction was made by General David A. Burchinal, who flew in one of the early firebomb attacks on Japan. Quoted in Richard H. Kohn and Joseph P. Harahan, eds.,
Strategic Air Warfare: An Interview with Generals Curtis E. LeMay, Leon W. Johnson, David A. Burchinal, and Jack J. Catton
(Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1988), p. 61.

“I'll tell you what war is about”
:
Quoted in Warren Kozak,
LeMay: The Life and Wars of General Curtis LeMay
(Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 2009), p. xi.

“We scorched and boiled and baked to death more people”
:
Although more Japanese were most likely
killed in Hiroshima and Nagasaki than in Tokyo, LeMay's remark succinctly conveys his view of nuclear weapons. See LeMay,
Mission with LeMay
, p. 387.

“about the darkest night in American military aviation history”
:
Ibid.
,
p. 433.

“I can't afford to differentiate”
:
Quoted in Kohn and Harahan,
Strategic Air Warfare
, p. 98.

“Every man a coupling or a tube”
:
LeMay,
Mission with LeMay
, p. 496.

“we are at war now”
: Ibid., p. 436.

San Francisco was bombed more than six hundred times
:
Cited in ibid.

“a
single instrument
:
 . . . directed, controlled”:
The quote, from an article by air power theorists Colonel Jerry D. Page and Colonel Royal H. Roussel, can be found in Michael H. Armacost,
The Politics of Weapons Innovation: The Thor-Jupiter Controversy
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1969), p. 101.

Louis Slotin was tickling the dragon
:
For Slotin's accident and its aftermath, see Stewart Alsop and Ralph E. Lapp, “The Strange Death of Louis Slotin,” in Charles Neider, ed.,
Man Against Nature
(New York: Harper & Brothers, 1954), pp. 8–18; Clifford T. Honicker, “America's Radiation Victims: The Hidden Files,”
New York Times,
November 19, 1989; Richard E. Malenfant, “Lessons Learned from Early Criticality Accidents,” Los Alamos National Laboratory, submitted for Nuclear Criticality Technology Safety Project Workshop, Gaithersburg, MD, May 14–15, 1996; and Eileen Welsome,
The Plutonium Files: America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War
(New York: Dial Press, 1999), pp. 184–88.

“Slotin was that safety device”
:
“Report on May 21 Accident at Pajarito Laboratory,” May 28, 1946, in Los Alamos, “Lessons Learned from Early Criticality Accidents.”

David Lilienthal visited Los Alamos for the first time
:
For the disarray at Los Alamos and the absence of atomic bombs, see Richard G. Hewlett and Francis Duncan,
Atomic Shield: A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission, Volume 2
,
1947—1952
(University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1969)
,
pp. 30, 47–48
;
May et al., “History of Strategic Arms Competition,”
Pt. 1,
p. 2; Gregg Herken,
The Winning Weapon: The Atomic Bomb in the Cold War 1945–1950
(New York: Vintage, 1982), pp. 196–99; Necah Stewart Furman,
Sandia National Laboratories: The Postwar Decade
(Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1990), pp. 233–36; and James L. Abrahamson and Paul H. Carew,
Vanguard of American Atomic Deterrence: The Sandia Pioneers, 1946–1949
(Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002), p. 120.

“one of the saddest days of my life”
:
Quoted in Herken,
Winning Weapon
, p. 196.

“The substantial stockpile of atom bombs”
:
Quoted in Furman
, Sandia National Laboratories
, p. 235.

at most, one
:
“Actually, we had one [bomb] that was probably operable when I first went off to Los Alamos: one that had a good chance of being operable,” Lilienthal later told the historian Gregg Herken. Although Los Alamos had perhaps a dozen nuclear cores in storage, a shortage of parts made it impossible to put together that many bombs. Colonel Gilbert M. Dorland, who headed the bomb-assembly battalion at Sandia, had an even bleaker view of the situation than Lilienthal. “President Truman and the State Department were plain bluffing,” Dorland later wrote. “We couldn't have put a bomb together and used it.” For Lilienthal, see Herken,
Winning Weapon
, p. 197. For Dorland, see Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterrence,
p. 120.

“probably operable”
:
Quoted in Herken,
Winning Weapon
, p. 197.

“We not only didn't have a pile”
:
Quoted in ibid, p. 235.

“haywire contraption”
:
Quoted in Hansen,
Swords of Armageddon
,
Voulme 1
, p. 133.

Nobody had bothered to save all the technical drawings
:
According to the official history of the Atomic Energy Commission, when the original Manhattan Project scientists left Los Alamos, they “left behind them no production lines or printed manuals, but only a few assistants, some experienced technicians, some laboratory equipment, and a fragmented technology recorded in thousands of detailed reports.” See Hewlett and Duncan,
Atomic Shield,
p. 134. For the lack of guidance on how to build another Little Boy, see Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterrence
, pp. 41–42.

He'd wrapped the metal around a Coke bottle
:
See Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterence,
p. 42.

the final assembly of Mark 3 bombs
:
Ibid., pp. 60–61.

“a very serious potential hazard to a large area”
:
Quoted in Hansen,
Swords of Armageddon, Volume 1
, p. 137.

secretly constructed at two Royal Air Force bases
:
During the summer of 1946, the head of the Royal Air Force and the head of the United States Army Air Forces had decided that British bases should have atomic bomb assembly equipment, “just in case.” See Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterrence,
pp. 115–17; Ken Young, “No Blank Cheque: Anglo-American (Mis)understandings and the Use of the English Airbases,”
Journal of Military History
, vol. 71, no. 4 (October 2007), 1136–40; and Ken Young, “US ‘Atomic Capability' and the British Forward Bases in the Early Cold War,”
Journal of Contemporary History,
vol. 42, no. 1 (January 2007), pp. 119–22.

“if one blew, the others would survive”
:
Quoted in Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterrence,
p. 119.

parts and cores to assemble fifty-six atomic bombs
: See Wainstein et al.,“Evolution of U.S. Command and Control,” p. 34.

deploy only one bomb assembly team overseas
:
The AFSWP had two fully trained teams by the end of 1948—but lacked the support personnel to send both into the field at the same time. See ibid., p. 17; and Abrahamson and Carew,
Vanguard of Atomic Deterrence,
pp. 68–69, 150.

Robert Peurifoy was a senior at Texas A&M
:
Peurifoy interview.

killed more than two million civilians
:
That is a conservative estimate; the Korean War was especially brutal for noncombatants. According to Dong-Choon Kim, who served as Standing Commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Korea, “the percentage of civilian deaths was higher than in any other war of the 20th century.” For the estimate and the quote, see Dong-Choon Kim, “The War Against the ‘Enemy Within': The Hidden Massacres in the Early Stages of the Korean War,” in Gi-Wook Shin, Soon-Won Park, and Daqing Yang, eds.,
Rethinking Historical Injustice and Reconciliation in Northeast Asia: The Korean Experience
(New York: Routledge, 2007), p. 75.

“prevent premature detonation”
:
“Final Evaluation Report, MK IV MOD O FM Bomb,” “The Mk IV Evaluation Committee, Sandia Laboratory, Report No. SL-82, September 13, 1949 (
SECRET/RESTRICTED DATA
/declassified), p. 60.

“integrated contractor complex”
: See Furman,
Sandia National Laboratories,
pp. 310–12.

In Violation

Jeff Kennedy had just gotten home
:
Interview with Jeffrey Kennedy.

Kennedy thought, “Wow”
:
Ibid.

“Commander, if you want to tell me how to do my job”
:
Quoted in ibid.

Sandaker was a twenty-one-year-old PTS technician
:
Interview with James Sandaker.

“Well, I got to go”
:
Ibid.

“All right,” Sandaker said
:
Ibid.

“baby oil trailer”
: See “Report, Major Missile Accident, Titan II Complex 374-7,” Statement of Archie G. James, Staff Sergeant, Tab U-42, p. 1.

“Tell it not to land”
:
Holder interview.

“Jeff, I fucked up like you wouldn't believe”
:
Quoted in Kennedy interview.

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